THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1910 Trouble No and Heartburn All liver diseases of whatever char kcter are diseases of the highest im portance and demand close attentior The liver is the Jargest and one of the ,most important organs of the body. Its duty is to prepare and se crete bile, and serve as one of the fil ters of the body, cleansing it of all impurities and poisons. Therefore when the liver gets vit of order ft is ¢ the starting of troable every part of the body. Keep the liver active by using Mii- burn's Laxa-Liver Pills and you will aave no heartburn, constipation. Hil- lousness, sick or bilious headaches, dull, yellow gyes, brown blotches, sallow complexion, coated tongue, jaundice, catarrh of the stomach, or the painful pfotruding internal or bleeding piles, Mrs. John Kadey, Chipman, N.B., writes: --"I - have used Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills for some time and | Can recommend them to any one suf- in nearly _ fering from heartburn and liver trou. bla. 1 tried other remedies, but they | only relleved mie for a short time. 1 'always recommend Laxa-Liver Pills 10 all sufferers as I think they are a valuable remedy." Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are 25¢. it vial at all dealers or mailed direct an receipt of price by The T. Milburn "Co.; Limited, Toronto, Ont. i ts OMAN'S HAIR | REACHES TO KNEES 'A Year Ago Was Threatened W ith ! Baldness Tells How She Made Her Hair Grow. > i Mrs. Esther Emery, now visiting friends in the city, is the fortunate possesaap of marvelously beautiful | alr, whigh, avhen loosened from its coils, falls to her knees. Moreover, | * It is of soft, silky and fluffy texture and fn color a glorious, glossy gold. | Yet just one year ago she was threat- i #ned with baldness. Urged to tell | how she had obtained this wonderful | growth in so short a time, she said: | " "Twelve months ago my hair,! whiéh then reached: barely to my | shoulders, was falling out at an alarming rate and growing very thin, actually exposing the bald scalp in several spots. It was dull and life-| Jess in color, turning grey in patches, Rnd very dry and brittle, My head | was covered with dandruff and itched | like mad all the time. 1 tried fully | a dozen different hair tonics, but they never did me a bit of good. One day 1 chanced to read in my home © paper of a simple home prescription to make the hair'grow that was re- commended by a well-known physi- clan, It said that by taking ordinary Lavona de Composee and mixing with Bay Rum and Menthol Crystals and applying to the scalp each night with the finger tips that new hair would grow very rapidly. I decided to try it and had my druggist mix 2 ounces of the Lavona de Composed with 6 oz. of Bay Rum and 3% dr. of Menthol Crystals, and started to use| it. grow. Firat, the hair stopped fall- ing, the itching ceased and' the dan- druft disappeared. Then tiny little hairs appeared all over my scalp. | These grew and grew as though no- | thing would ever stop them. They are growing yet and, while, of course I have used the treatment steadily and expect to continue it, at least until my hair reaches the floor. 1 might have stopped and been perfect. ly satisfied at the end of three months. 1 think that any woman ean get long, thick, beautiful hair | by using this prescription as I have recommended it to several friends and all arg. delighted with the result, The prescription is very inexpensive and any druggist can fill it." Those wh useit should be careful not to get it on the face or where the hair is not desired. | nc AA PNA pi itl 6 'OUCH! THAT OLD - RHEUMATISM " out that bottle of Sloan's t and "Knock it : 2 galley-west" , BREN Rwsirepared for that quick switch in temperature, were you? Left" you stiff, | sore, full of rheumatic twinges? ' You should have had a bottle of Slean's Liniment handy---that would have soon eased up the muscles, quieted the jumpy, painful, affected | part--penetrated without rubbing, bringing gratifying reitet. Helpful In all attacks of lumbago, sciatica, external soreness, stiffness, strains, aches, sprains, Get a bottle at your druggists. Made In Canada. 8bci, T0¢., $1.40. i Sloan's I ESR tial ISI lA Just ge Hee 5 gs ra RN hy Our Baby Pictures ka al portraits ve a natura n 4 Tiy. and beautifully Fr iehed in the 1 NEW XMAS. FOLDER 'Come in and let u acquaint. iin Ped with the Pan" 4 { Cross, at the Cross." When a returned | and industrial peace. Once let . cance of the testimony. In the famous | s7ve {clean by the blood of Christ, i France, My, how quickly my hdir di@ tblossoms with flowers, {tbe reformed. Assuredly, A a TRE ETS THE DAIL & The International Sunday School Lesson for Dec. 14 is "At the Trial and Crucifixion of Jesus." John 18:15-27; 19:25-27. By William T. Ellis. . T ss (still is erying from His Cress, "Come i} unto Me, all ye. that labor and are keavy laden, and I will give you rest." | a's most fameus life-long Sunday older he gr the hold of his Bible $ werhood upon him. Recently, rough three morning se: him--an "inner cirele" a large men's brotherhood ot a time that is engrossed 2 service. He himselt f Sunday in the big down- | rew pleasures, fresh semsations, urch of whieh he is an officer, | trivial and prideful gratifications, He ting the sick in'the neigh- hclds up the > Cross upon which Ha! What most interested me was upholden. "I, if 1 be lifted up, | was the hold that the erueifixion of | will draw all men unto Me." The new Joss has taken upon this man's level of life. we seek is the Cross- thinking. Again and again he adverted | lcvel, It is salvation from sin that is | to it as the very center;of Christian |a more pressing need of the land to- faith and hope. It was he who started day than the need for lower prices or | the erowd of men singing, "At the fcr greater production or for social oka class The Master Word The master word for our troubled today is the Master's word. In front in the | vices | 44 Bible Class and a spends é " wn ch or else vis berhood prodigal, an ex-conviet testified tothe world come to the Toot of the C) change made in his life by the Crueci- | and everything, yes, literally every- | fied Christ, this great merchant not (thing, that ails our sickly time will | only approved it publicly, but later he healed straightway. i spoke to me privately of the sicnifi- To save the world it'is necessary to the people in the world. And wien they are saved from sin they seen the miracle will be saved from everything that | md riamber, of men the matter with our day. The brok- | lives wete made en heart of the Saviour will break the | proud and stubborn wed wilful Pearts | Musing upon the theme, memory of all of us who are hurting our | harks swiftly back to France and ta gereration, His vast love will drown Macedonia and to Palestine, where our miserable selfishness, What saith | FOWS Upon rows, aeres upon acres, of little crosses mark the resting place [they that live should no longer" lve! er dead. This has bean the unto themselves, but unto Him whe | war of the eross, By some impulse fo their sakes died and rose again." deeper than réason, the nations have { All the problems; of poverty and chosen the cross symbol for the fallen pelf meet in the Christ on the Cross Protestant England, once-atheistic | and are there solved. Says Harry Lee: Catholic Italy, Orthodox "xi ye & ~ . Serbia, Roumania and Greece. All My Master was so Yery poor accept the cross as the significant They nailed Him loa ross; memorial of the men who have laid So very rich my Master was down their lives for the Causé He gave His a » Instinctively, we have placed them in And knew no loss. fellowship with the Saviour who Bas | The Greatest Story Of AH Time given the cross its meaning of victory . and of vicariousness . Unable to do more than cast a | ZT cluded glance at the unfathomable ; meanings of the crucifixion of Jesus Crosses At Mount Sinai for this era, we turn to the inspired | Is it not becoming clear that only (Story itself, quoting the Weymouth | the Cross will save our troubled time ? | Version: We have tried legislation and arbitra-| "Then ; tion and war and a couneil of nations: scourged Him. And the' soldiers, yet still the unrest of humanity grows twisting twigs of thorn into a] apace. All that wisdom and law could | Wreath, put it on His head, and threw do has been done; but in vain. There around Him gs érimson cloak: Then is knowledge enough in the world to they began. to march up to Him, say- | save civilization; and law enough; and" ing in a mocking voice, : material force enough; nevertheless, | * 'Hail, King of the Jews!" organized society is in a desperate | "And they struck him with case today. palms of their hands, 1 am reminded of a spectacle which | - "Onée more Pilate came out and | 1 observed at Mt. Sipai last summer, | 58id to the Jews, . Surmounting the Mountain of the "'See, 1 am bringing him out to Low, and all the surrounding peaks, vou to let you clearly, understand are iron crosses, erected centuries that I find no crime in him' ago by devout Greek monks from St. "So Jesus came out, wearing the! Katherine's Monastery, At pains and | Wreath of thorns and the erimson personal risk, they placed the symbol clcak. And Pilate said to them. of our faith upon those rocky peaks; | * 'See, there is the man.' sensing the great truth that the "As soon then as the High Priests Mountain of the Law, without the and the officers saw Him, they shout- sign of Love and Sacrifice, is incom- | ed / plete. Moses is inadequate, except as! * 'To the vross! To the cross!' hu leads to Christ Mount Sinai is " "Take him yourselves and crucify bare and barren; Mount Calvary him,' said Pilate; 'for 1, at any rate, | find no erime in him' ' Panicky persons are crying fori "We, \replied the Jews, 'have a more law, more foree, more jails, | Law, and iin accordance with that | more machine guns, with which to Law he ought to die, for having | meet the menace of red radicalism. [claimed to be the Son of God.' ! Their plan is futile. Only a new! "It was the day of Preparation for | old church with which his name is associated he has wrought titges be and women wh took Jesus and] Pilate the { spirit in society, and in all classes of | the Passover, about six o'clock in th! society, can save us from this hate. morning. Then he said to the Jews, | begetting programme of violence, |" 'There is your king!' ! That is the spirit of the Cross. Of | "This caused a storm of outeries, | course we should deal vigorously with | *"'Away with him! Away with | lawbreakers, all lawbreakers, regard-+him! Crueify him! { less of class; but even when so doing | _"'Am I'to crucify your king 2 {the motive needs to be the motive of | Pilate asked. i Calvary, which is to save. Love to| *'We have no king, except Caesar,' | the point of self-sacrifice alone can answered the High Priests. | deliver the world from the menace of | "Then Pilate gave Him up to them | bitterness wd Jeifishness and vin- Jobe sTucified. they took Jesus; and | ictiveness -spirit. i E €Sus; and 55.300 £ nas-Spinit | He went out earrying His own eross, | The Unchastened Nations {to the place called "Skull-place~--or, | Real radicalism is, in a dictionary {in Hebrew, Golgotha--where they sense, the getting down to the root |nailed Him to a cross, aad two others! of things. The superficial thinking of [at thé same time, one on each side fe bts So mah all nd nk Re ism; it is the mos vious nd | i shallow sort of unrestrained ir jto the top of the cross. It ran thus: | interest. @ thinkin ople of to-| § : day would really -- Ral they | 'Jesus The Nazarene, The King would quickly perceive that at the | of the Jews { Root. of a successful social order, even | "Many 'of the Jews fead this no PL A LL Ey FR Rp Rg Rl be. the spirit of good will to men, and | crucified was near the city, and the | of the subordination of the desires of brew, Latin and Greek A i the individual for the sake of the com- Pani tn a Pricet: t is led the | munity. True radicalism digs deep |JeWish High Priests to remonstrate | anti] x Souteh to the wy *oundation. |" Rate, not write 'The King | Pply 0 the times. The Re? 77 tL { ccmmon ery is that the world Needs lof the dows, Shey ad, ut that | 0 i ; 3 : yJews." : | De aE Meu 1 ve cri ov wt Admittedly. And to be re-edueated. |*™" Was Pilates answer." | Jithout Smestion. But beyond all rar | se needs, and underlying them | Sydenham Veteran Decors et thes i he Mlpévadit -- need | Sydenham, Dec. Lac] owe Fagedl i od Yt ed rom Elwood J. W. Richards, son of Mr. Bra a a a en aS BA land Mrs. L. J. Richards, Sydenham, Ponders call 8i0; | cecgived his military medal last Sat. notice was in three languages-He- | saved from foolish leaders and fatu- SHANE'S SYMBOL, VICTORY'S EWBLE pursuit of more money, more leisure, | the Scripture? "He died for all that | ¢ ke, are lighted the foat ous reformers; saved from theorists and demagogues; saved on heed- less followers of everything that is new, saved from the blind ob- : Seurantism which clings only to what War has not chastened humanity; Sorrow has not chastened it; nor yet hunger or cold or vast social up- heavals. Is it not time that we turn aside from our cheap and futile de- bettering life and kneel at of the Cross, where peace has ever been found by, the penitent? We uve failed to save ourselves: y not ot fhe Christ save us? His yearn itr for the world's betterment is more real than that of the most solitons publicist. If we could but hear, He a. Es urday, for bravery on the field He is tewety-four 'years of age. He served six months in the 14th Regi- ment, Kingston, in 1914. Then in the late war, when volunteers were asked for, he enlisted in the 146th Battalion on the 24th May, 1916. On reaching England he was transferred to the 4th CM.R. and proceeded to France three 'weeks after his arrival overseas. He was gassed after some months and returned to England, where he spent five months in a hos- pital. After his recovery he volun- teered to go into France the second time, being transferred to the 3rd Battalion, Can Engineers. Ha pity, ie "E5cu] un fer three years ervice, and arrived back safely last April.in his home 20wn, where he is once more a resi- ent. : 2 Last To Leave. ~Frank d "being wounded, af-| Brest, Dec. 11.---¥ran . Polk, General Tasker 1 Bliss, Pe he iS tuion romulhing in Fr = ed States yesterday, - re EAA LE MERTEN ¥ PAGE NINE Y BRITISH WHIG . of the PRINCESS MARIE OF RUMANIA The latest bride io be picked out for the Prince of Wales by London saciety is the Princess Marie -of Rumania. . The Princess is at school in London and a frequent visitor to the Royal Palace at Windsor. She is 20 years old and is consid- ered ong of the most beautiful of European princesses. a TOMORROW'S THE BIG 'DAY Take "Cascarets" Tonight for Liver and Bowels and Wake Up Clear, Rosy, Fit!--No Shake Up! an oe Ry SB Genera Cascarets and enjoy the nicest, gent- cleat! Don't stay sick, bilious, hend- | lest laxative-cathartic you ever ex- achy, constipated. « Remove the liver perienced? Cascarets never gripe, and bowel pofSon which fs keeping! sicken or inconvenience one like your head dizzy, your tongue coated, | Salts, Oil, Calomel or harsh Pills. your breath bad and vy #0 little, They work sour. Why flot get a 1 sleep. ' Feel grand tomorrow! Ba effi- r stomach | cost il box of| .OF TAR / & COD - LIVER OIL Coughs, Colds, Grippe, Bronchitis, ¥ivopine Cough, Asthma, Etec. il MATHIEU'S SYRUP isa ign-tonic combining - .. the curative properties of TAR -- the étrengthening virtues of COD LIVER OIL. L Colds,-when neglected or badly treated give rise to consequences of sucha grave character that you should not risk using inferior preparations. SYRUP {s the on! nuive remedy whose se« MATHIEU'S STR tocropup hiv boi rrth of doubtfial value. ON SALE EVERYWHERE Kingston's New Industry THE JAVEL MANUFACTURING CO. Manufacturers of "KLEAN ALL" JAVEL WATER Contains=-NO ACID-=NO LYE Manufactured Specially for Whitening and taking out Stains from white linen and Cotton Without Bolling. Also cleans bath tubs, sinks, copper, porcelain, marble tiling. | ASK. YOUR GROCER FOR IT--18c. A QUART BOTTLE Return bottle and save So To disinfect leave some in open container in room. Germs-can- not live where it is used. TRY IT PLEASE. : JAVEL MFG. 00., 19 ONTARIO STREET, KINGSTON. PHONE 454. of em wen aon bees} Santa Claus Ever Brought" That's What They Will Say ¥ BEAUTIFUL~Lovely wood, with autiful natural grain and color- be ings. USEFUL~-Familiarizes one the best singers, musical artists It provides m for dancing and a programme for an evening's entertainment, Go to Your Music Dealer; Hear the It Will Convince You. and orchestras, aa doa) record. You will say i : WRITE TO-DAY for Catalogue. We will give you the name of the nearest Curtiss Aeroplanes and Motors, Limited . v you ask Santa Claus, "What shall I give?" he will answer, '" Give an Aeronola."" an individual, for a family, or for a club. The BEST Christmas Present must be BEAUTIFUL, USEFUL, PLEASURABLE and ENDURING. Nothing more fills the specifications than the CURTISS AERONOLA. 163 Dufferin Street, . . NN It's the BEST Christmas Present for ST completely PLEASURABLE -- The Acromela produces a tone of pure and inimit- able sweetness and unusual power, No instrumént can give more pleas- with ure to its hearers, hr A -------- 1 of tone produced by the Aeronocla we want you to do--hear it. Go say, "1 want fo hear the Aeromola that's the Talking Machine for me." A eS on wR. 2 oe Toronto, Canada SN Ee --------------------------=---------------------------------- re SE